Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 26 Mar 1970, p. 14

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

14 THE LIBERAL, Richmond Hill, Ontario. Thursday & Co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 129 Church St. South Richmond Hill. Ontario (416) 884-658! 'Joscelyn, Laughlin, Harper, Tory & Associates Chartered Accountants 31 Yonge Street North Richmond Hill. Ont. 884-4474-5 91 Geneva Street St. Catharines. Ont. - 684-1177 13 Queenston St. St. Catharines, Ont. LEONARD R. ROSENBERG &ASSOCIATES Chartered Accountants Telephone 884-7110 84 Yonge St. South Aurora. Ontario 889-6662 CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 806 Bayvlew Plaza Telephone 884-8651 Prices on request or by hour R. 1’. (Bob) ROSS 130 Centre St. W. U 884-1788 Mister Transmission Ltd. 177 YONGE ST. N. RICHMOND HILL ‘ Richmond Hill Tree Service & I surveyors Forestry Co. Ltd. mus ARE OCR éUSINI-zss; Yates & Yates Transmission Service 2468 DUFFERIN ST. Toronto Automatic & Standard Transmission Specialists 781-0221 RICHMOND HILL 884-4306 Tree Surgery - Landscaping FREE ESTIMATES Brian H. Cowen Life Time Guarantee Automatic Specialists Britnell, Moore Nor-town By Competent Tradesman Auto Transmission Accountants CARPENTRY SPECIAL MACHINERY GENERAL REPAIRS H. Van Dyke - Arborist PROFESSIONAL 8. BUSINESS DIRECTORY NEED AN EXPERT? CALL ONE OF THESE . . . Lenok Machine Shop 73 CENTRE ST. EAST RICHMOND HILL 884-1993 Roy V. Bick Insurance Ltd. FOREST VALLEY TREE EXPERTS Engineering 25 Grandview Ave. Thornhill 889-1379 CUSTOM WORK Complete Insurance Service 17 Queen St. W. STEAMFITTING WELDING Forestry Insurance 884-6663 884-7774 363-3959 Office Supplies Ernie Brock 8: Son Barrow Insurance SerVIces Ltd. Insurance - Mortgages Fire, Auto and Liability Motor Vehicle Finance Service TELEPHONE 727-9488-9 Rear 4'1 Yonge St. S. Aurora, Ontario 16 Yonge Street North' RICHMOND HILL 884-4231 889-5729 Furniture, Office Supplies. Social Stationery, Typewriter and Adder Sales. A. W. Kirchen, 0D. 17 Yonge St. N. Richmond Hill GORDON S. WOOD H. B. FISHER Office Supplies Ltd. LTD. Kirby Brock Maple. Ont. COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE Bus. 832-2621 Res. 832-1224 BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT ART STUDIOS 34 Ybnge St S. Richmond Hill 884-1955 Sporting Goods C.C.M. 8: Raleigh Bicycles Repairs to All Makes A Complete Line of Sporting Goods 25 Yonge Street South Richmond Hill, 884-1213 Corner Agency Limited Eric’s Cycle and Sports Shop Fire, Auto and Liability 15 Yonge Street N. 884-1551 - 884-1219 Thornhill - 889-0242 Eye Glasses Contact Lenses Optometrists to your eye doctor’s prescription aim-Wallpaper 9114 Yonge St. Richvale Ontario Land Surveyors FREE DELIVERY INTERIORS LTD. Insurance 4901A Yonge Street Willowdale 221-3485 Opticians 889-1059 By Appointment (Continued) 884-3962 I Transportation RUMBLE TRANSPORT Bunny Snow’s T.V. ADMIRAL SALES 8: SERVICE Repairs to All Makes Call us abOut Rentals Phone 884-6521 In The Mall, 250 ange St. N Richmond Heights Céntre Richmond Hill Ceaches for all Occasions PINDER BROS. LTD. STE'EI. LINTELS I BEAMS Coach Lines Ltd. P.C.V. Class A. C. and H. DAILY SERVICE RICHMOND HILL TO TORONTO Local and Long Distance Hauling STOUFFVILLE â€" Hopes to obtain the services of a full ltime recreation director for Stouffville have been squashed again â€" at least for 1970. The cost of hiring such a person would be too great a strain on the municipal coffers to Reeve Ken Laushway. NEWMARKET: A second mem- ber of the tmm‘s engineering staff, David McCaffrey, who had been assistant to the en- gineer, has resigned. This res- ignation followed that Of Tom: Engineer George McLellan by hm weeks. Mr. McCaffrey has been with the town five years. Council has hired a firm of con- sulting engineers at $500 per week to replace Mr. McLellan ‘until a full-time man can be lfound. Langdonk FOR INFORMATION CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR® Read the Pulitzer Prize winning Christian Science Monitor. Rarely more than 20 pages, this easy-to. read daily newspaper gives you a complete grasp of national and world affairs. Plus fashion, sports, busi- ness, and the arts. Read the newspaper that 91% of Congress reads. Keep up on current affairs the easy way Please send me the Monitor for E] 1 year $26 [I 6 mos. $13 I] 3 mos. $6.50 [:1 Check or money order street state. nam‘ Box 125, Astor Stetlan Bostan, Massachusetts 02123 March 26, 1970 STEEL FABRICATING Kept in Stock Portable Crane Service TV Repairs To Custom Specifications 2 Otonobee BA. 1-3344 â€" enclosed [1 Bill me Trucking 884-1013 364-2625 Telephone 833-5351 PB 18 County Board Improves Human Relations In Schools And Offices What is vélopmént it helped County? At a meeting of the County Board of Education on February 23. representatives of the unit. which is a private organization made up of three full-time edu- cators whose backgrounds in- clude teaching. school adminis- tration. supervision. teacher training and planning develop- ment. reported on the results of a one-week organization skills laboratory in December. Twenty-nine county educators took part in the program. and as a result. the board was told, a guidance teacher found a dif- ferent and more effective way of counselling students. A tea- cher developed a different ap- proach to evaluating students“ Work which has improved their attitude to the work. Two teachers are better able to deal with difficult students. A principal has been able to communicate with a teacher and resolve a problem of two years‘ standing. A teacher was helped to resolve a serious con- flict between one student and the rest. of his class. and the emotional climate of the class has improved. The skills laboratory, the trustees learned. was ah intan- sive program for personal growth and the examples cited are representative of the ways in which the workshop and subâ€" sequent follow-up benefited those who attended. The OD representatives told the board that up to now the question of increasing the ef- mun1mmnummmumlmmumun“uuuuuuumuuunulmul mun“mun\nun11mumquumuumummnnmuumumummu VICTORIAN ORDER OF NURSES RICHMOND HILL BRANCH 4 Yonge Street South NURSE-IN-CHARGE MISS JANE BOWMAN SERVING YORK COUNTY 884-4101 an organization de- unit. and how has education in York {ou probany won't be able fo Spoi’ The big change in this year’s Volkswagen if you iusf pass one on the highway; but you might get an inkling when one passes you. A__- ... l [[114 g-. _.. . I The 1970 VW has a bigger engine. (It's now i600 cc.'s.t How we did it'is interesting: we made the engine bigger, but we didn’t add any weight. 50 while it pushes the Volkswagen Announcing the fastest beetle ever made. ficiéncy with which werk groups function on a day to day basis and thé or- ganization of tasks so that in- dividual and organizational aims are both met to thé fullést ex- tent has been pretty'exclusivé- 1y an industrial enncern. The county board is the first educational institution which has asked for these services. 1n the planning and design stagés of its program with the board. the OD Unit consults with Dr. John Croft of the On- tario Institute For Studies in Education and two of his 3550- oiatés. Three moreorganization skills workships will be offered. the second is taking place dur- ing the mid-winter break this week. In addition. the 0D Unit has worked with personnel in an area office; has resolved .3 con- flict between two departments where distrust and hostility were increasing and two mem- bers had decided to leave the organization; is working with a group of vice-principals to exa- mine their needs and with a large group of principals to im- prove their meeting procedures and behaviors. It is working with a com- mitteé of trustees. helping them to clarify their goals and work- procedures and is working 'with two managerial committees to help them work more effec- tively. Other programs to be offered will utilize skills developed by those in the system who have grovm personally and under- stand the purpose of the whole enterprise. thus representing an involvement in the “gI‘aSSroots”. As well. members of the unit have visited a number of schbols, talking with many people who had requ'e'st'ed in- terviews. The board was told that re- presentatives of thé (Ottawa and Et'obicoke Boards of Education and the Metro COnservation Authority have visited the unit to find out what it is and what it can do fix an educational system. Markham Township Trustee John Honsberger congratulated the OD representatives and the board administration on the re- port. “We can compete with any- body if we can compete with ideas,” he declared. “I hope to see mare of this sort of thing, hut Only for Our baard and staff, but for everybody." 178 YONGE STREET NORTH/RICHMOND HILL/’889-770'l W. 8: P. Motors Limited (Continued from Page 2) have composed important works performed for the first time by the choir. Elmer Iseler, as the driving force behind the Festival Singers, has had a career which, when reviewed, is proof of the success which must come to one of such a single-minded dedication. Raised in Port Colborne, Mr. Iseler first realized that his life's work lay in music, when he came under the influence and inspiration of Dr. Ulrich Leupold, with whom he studied organ and church music at Water- loo Lutheran University. He earned his Bachelor of Music degree at the University of Toronto, and later conducted the Uni- versity of Toronto Symphony Orchestra and chorus for two years. For twelve years he taught orchestra and choral classes in two collegiates, bringing his performers to such a high standard that his first secondary school, York Memorial, boasted the first collegiate choir to have a series on CBC. Since 1962 the Singers have been making re- cordings for such famous labels as Columbia, Capitol and Decca. The Columbia recording of “Symphony Of Psalms” by Stravinsky, conducted by the com- poser, has been critically acclaimed throughout the world. and in 1965 the Singers’ director, together with Stravinsky, was nominated for the “Grammy” award. Among other recordings of note made by the choir are “Choral Music of Healey Willan" and Poulenc's “Mass in G Major", and music by the Canadian composers, Beckwith, Russell and Somers. Their new releases include John Beckwith's “The Trumpets Of Summer", and “Five Songs Of The Newfoundland Outport‘s” by Harry Somers. Mr. Iseler has toured Canada and the States with his choir, and a special honor accorded the Fest- ival Singers was an invitation to perform a Christ- mas Concert for President Lyndon Johnson at the White House in 1968. The same year Mr. Iseler resigned from the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, to which he had been appointed three years previously, to devote all his time and energies to the directorship of the two choirs, the Mendelssohn Choir and the Festival Singers. During this time his ambition to profes- sionalize the Singers was realized. In 1969, the Singers came under professional management and were appointed Choir-in-Residence for the Scar- boro Board of Education. The choir’s involvement in school music is another exciting aspect of its many activities. The last program in a series of four given by the Festival Singers, will be performed on April 18 in the Great Hall of Hart House at 8.30 pm. not on April 11 as previously advertised. The program will include music by Healey Willan, Poulenc, Palestrine, Morowetz, and the beautiful “Missa Brevis In G Minor” by Bach. For tickets call Mrs. Barbara Mar- shall, 483-9388. The majority of these singers are teachers in public or high schools, but the day is obviously approaching when these fine artists may earn their living solely as members of this great Canadian choir. harder, it doesn'f push itself any harder. One Of the redséns why Volkswagen engines with 200,000 miles on them are not unheard of. Still, a little more horsepower hardly makes the bug a Beasf. A new Volkswagen won't show any- ody that you’ve arrived. It'll iust make sure you get there. In The Spotlight \ Rambing Around (Continued from Page 2) She says that new members would be welcome any time of the year and interested swimmers could call Frank Phillips at 221-8115. All season there have been talent trials each Monday evening for swimmers and although this part of the program is nearly over. it will continue again next fall. Coming up is the Ontario Age Gmup Championship for swimmers 10 years to 14 years in April. The following Thornhill swimmers belong to the North York Club: Lance Aho, Betti and Bill Connor, Dorothy and David Cram, Christine Lovett- Doust. Ann McMonagle. Marianne Montgomery, Graham and Brian Such. Steve and Carol Tilston, Carol and Merri Toth and Julie Eastwood. Cara Welsh of Richmond Hill is also a member of the swim club. Mrs. Eastwood said that the coaches of North York Aquatic have done an excellent job the past few years. Head coach is Ron Walbank, and assist- ant coaches are Doug Bell and Rab Donaldson. following Qtory is about Julie Eastwood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Eastwood of Thorn- hill. She is a competitive speed swimmer. IT‘S FUN TO SWIM Julie Eastwood first learned to swim at the family summer cottage and she's been swimming ever since. Now she is fourteen years old and attends Royal Orchard Senior Public School. ~Home life. school work and swimming take up most of her time. She received the better part of her instruction at the Etobicoke Aquatic Club and has won many medals and ribbons. At the same club she achieved her junior and intermediate swimming status but was too young to try for her senior. so her coach suggested she go in for competitive swimming. She was nine years old then. In 1966 she won a trophy as top girl swimmer. In 1968 she won the one hundred and two hundred metre for free style for Ontario. Three years ago. the Eastwoods moved to Thornhill and Julie became a member of the North York Club. Jolie Won most of her prizes with free style swimming but recently she's been achieving well with the breast stroke and individual medley swim- ming which is a combination of all strokes. Last February, she won the Hall of Fame Trophy for the North York Club and an All-Ontario swim meet. M “It was just too far to go back and forth to Etobicoke,” she said. “I love to swim,” Said Julie. Three nights a week, Julie Swims. Menday night she goes to the Glendon Pool on the York Uni- versity campus for an hour. Wednesday and Thurs- day she swims two hours each evening at the York Memorial Pool in Willowdale. Julie hopes to get her bronze in the fall and later her leader patrol and then she may consider training at a camp. However Julie has not made an obsession of her Sport as many do. In summer she likes to go to the cottage with the family. She only does special exercises or lifts weight when she has a big meet to attend. ‘ TANGIBLE REWARDS 0F COMPETITIVE SWIMMING Julie said that since she mOVed to Thornhill, her collection of ribbons, medals and trophies has increased considerably. Her bedrOOm shelves are lined with her trophies, and her ribbons and medals are attached to a special bulletin beard made by her father. Alf Eastwood. Already she has competed against many other clubs in Canada and the United States. She has been to Montreal, Kingston and Winnipeg. The trip to ,Winnipeg is an annual affair. She has visited U.S. clubs, for example, Cleveland, Rochester, Delaware and Pittsburgh. Recently she went to Montreal and won a first in the open age group. This is known as a Triangle Meet, composed of Quebec, Ontario and the Alle- gheney MOuntains. Another triumph for the North York organization. There is no doubt she will be winning other laurels but it seems that Julie, for the moment, is content with her life. She does not dream of being angreat or a great anything. She just wants the things that every normal girl wants, a happy family life. a. good education and enough swmming to keep her fit, relaxed and interested. Your Home and Automobile are very valuable invest» ments. Don‘t trust your Insurance Protection to IMPER- SONAL DISSERVICE. Don‘t be a Financml Victim of IMPERSONAL DISSERVICE. Although his Home was underinsured and his Basic pro- tection incomplete above is quoted the ONLY ADVICE an area resident received about the renewal of his Dwell- ing Insurance Policy. This is the only notice you will receive Avoid the.loss of your protection Make sure payment reaches us before due date For Expert Personal Insurance Service anywhere in Markham and Vaughan Townships call BUY ONE AT REGULAR PRICE GET ONE FREE! A.I.I.C. General Insurance Home - Automobile - BusineSS 7699 YONGE STREET, THORNHILL 889-6204. 889-4131 Where Knowledge and Experience Are On Your Side . . . 51 Yonge Street North Phone 884-3354 ADAMO'S HairStyIists Wash 'n' Wear S-t-r-e-t=câ€" Choice of any color Impersonal Disservice . SHELSTON, Richmond Hill Legion Court Reg. Price

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy